Research paper topics, free example research papers

Effects Of Racial Prejudice - 1,288 words
Effects Of Racial Prejudice The effects of racial
prejudice and segregation aimed at African
Americans in the south on their lives and
opportunities were deep-seeded and long lasting.
The effects of segregation were perhaps the most
destructive because they were legal and
above-board. These laws illustrated to the African
American population that their struggle was not
limited to battling the backward notions and
violent actions of cowardly southern rednecks, but
that they had to overcome the mentality and
ideology of a national government and, in fact, an
entire society, that was failing to recognize them
as citizens worthy of the basic rights and
freedoms to which they were entitled as Ame ...
Related: negative effect, prejudice, racial, racial prejudice, rights movement

Quotas For American Businesses Create Racial Discrimination - 1,184 words
Quotas for American businesses Create Racial
Discrimination Politics is assuming command of the
American economy in the form of pervasive equal
opportunity enforcement. In today's society,
everyone is supposed to be equal and have equal
rights, but in employment, there is more
discrimination than ever. American citizens need
to do away with affirmative action so that
America's job opportunities can once again be
based on merit, not skin color or ethnicity. Laws
have been passed, quotas have been established,
and seemingly, everything has been done to prevent
discrimination, but rather than ending
discrimination, these new laws and quotas have
begun to discriminate against a new group of peop ...
Related: american, american citizen, american economy, discrimination, quotas, racial, racial discrimination

Racial And Ethnic Relations - 1,861 words
Racial and Ethnic Relations. Jed Smart March 8,
1999 Racial and Ethnic Relations. Summary of Pages
65-74, A Nation of Immigrants: An Overview of the
Economic and Political Conditions of Selected
Racial and Ethnic Groups. The North American
economic development has seen several stages of
development. The first stage of economic
development was a plantation-slave economy mixed
with mercantilism, the second stage of development
was a competitive industrial economy, and the
stage third stage of economic development is
multinational capitalism. Economic institution and
related governmental actions have formed the tides
of migration and the resulting patterns of
immigrant adjustment. The original ...
Related: ethnic, ethnic groups, racial, racial discrimination, racial tensions

Racial Difference In Intelligence - 1,709 words
Racial Difference In Intelligence Is there a
racial difference in Intelligence? Is There a
Racial Difference in Intelligence? Starting with
birth, most Americans are consistently measured
and their abilities consistently assessed. While
no clear definition of intelligence has been
adopted universally, in general, definitions
stress either an ability to adapt to environment,
the capacity to learn, or the ability to think
abstractly. Like the word "love," intelligence
remains a term we all have a feel for but cannot
quite pin down. Today, this undefined ability has
become one of the most controversial topics in
psychology. Psychological researchers have
resisted racism by denying the existence ...
Related: intelligence, intelligence testing, racial, racial prejudice, most high

Racial Difference In Intelligence - 1,747 words
... ype. In The Fallacy of I.Q., Senna explains
that from conception on, the genotype is modified
by environmental factors. Thus, an individual's
genetic potential is always being expressed though
behavior acquired in a social and cultural
setting, his phenotype. A person's performance on
an "intelligence" test is phenotypic behavior. In
accordance with this "phenotypic" factor,
transracial adoption studies provide evidence
against the heritability of racial differences in
IQ. For example, in the well known Minnesota
Adoption Study, by age 17, adopted children with
two White biological parents had an average IQ of
106, adopted children with one White and one Black
biological parent had an av ...
Related: intelligence, intelligence test, racial, international journal, issues raised

Racial Discrimination Against Nonwhites - 1,557 words
Racial Discrimination Against Nonwhites During the
time of War World II, many group of nonwhite race
faced unfairness in the United States. Among all
the minorities that were being discriminated
against, the two most well known races were the
African American and the Japanese American. They
were treated unfairly due to their color and
culture. Even though they are two totally distinct
groups with different customs and backgrounds,
they felt similar the way they were being treated.
Both group were denied of their right as U.S.
citizen. Despite the fact that many African
Americans and Japanese Americans were born and
raise in the United States, the U.S. government
questioned their loyalty due ...
Related: discrimination, racial, racial discrimination, racial inequality, human beings

Racial Equality In America - 1,264 words
Racial Equality In America Throughout the history
of the country, America has been considered a
fairly racist union. Undoubtedly the greatest
injustice in the United States to this day is the
whites treatment of African-Americans,
specifically slavery. The vast majority of
non-black people of that time believed that blacks
were not equal to other races. White Americans of
the slavery period specifically held this view. It
was nearly impossible for a black to live free in
America, and it was even more difficult for a
black to find a job. As time passed, however, many
people began to change their views on race
relations in America. After slavery was abolished,
fewer and fewer people believed t ...
Related: america, america after, equality, racial, entertainment industry

Racial Equality In America - 1,259 words
... hese laws to be interpreted so
African-Americans are indeed getting jobs because
of their race. If someone is getting a job because
they can perform it better than anyone else, then
they deserve to get it, regardless of race. No
one, however, deserves to get or lose a job
because of their race. Any court that rules only
after considering the racial implications is not
just, despite the trust many have placed in the
judicial system. Justice is supposed to be blind.
Another place where laws have impacted racial
equality today is in the entertainment industry.
It seems that people can say just about whatever
they wish in the movies and in music today. If you
examine this a little closer, ho ...
Related: america, equality, racial, racial issues, african american

Racial Injustice Mumia Abu Jamal - 1,889 words
Racial Injustice (Mumia Abu Jamal The following
paper will discuss the topic of racial injustice
in the United States Legal System. Since this
topic is so broad, it will deal with the trial of
Mumia Abu Jamal in 1982. This paper will show how
the system will try anything to keep a minority
down. The system consists of upper middle class to
upper class whites that believe minorities are
inferior to them. The system is used is a
political machine used by whites to keep these
minorities from becoming powerful. If minorities
can speak their minds, have power, or bond
together, they can be a threat to the status quo.
This system still thrives in our world. A stunning
article, Race and the Death P ...
Related: injustice, jamal, racial, police officer, panther party

Racial Oppression: The System - 1,256 words
Racial Oppression: The System The System Today, a
serious problem exists all over the world. Racial
oppression takes place in the poorest and the
richest countries, including America. Racial
oppression is characterized by the majority, or
the ruling race, imposing its beliefs, values, and
laws on the minority, or the ruled race. In most
areas, the ruling race is upper class whites that
run the "system", and have a disproportionate
amount of power. In other areas, it may not be the
white race, but it is still the race that is
comprised of the majority, makes the laws, or has
the most money. These are the keys to domination
over the weaker minorities that don't have the
power to thrive under t ...
Related: racial, racial issues, first trip, promised land, inferior

Racial Profiling - 1,498 words
Racial Profiling The Race Against Racial Profiling
The great era of civil rights started in the
1960s, with Martin Luther King, Jr.'s stirring "I
have a Dream" speech at the historic march on
Washington in August of 1963. At the same time
Birmingham Police Commissioner "Bull" Connor used
powerful fire hoses and vicious police attack dogs
against nonviolent black civil rights activists.
Although these years proved to be the highlight
and downfall of civil rights in America, even with
the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting
Rights Act being passed, time has repeated these
tumultuous events again in the present. Racial
profiling has been one of many civil rights issues
concerning the unne ...
Related: profiling, racial, racial bias, racial profiling, political issues

Racial Profiling - 1,596 words
Racial Profiling Racial profiling is the tactic of
stopping someone because of the color of his or
her skin and a fleeting suspicion that the person
is engaging in criminal behavior (Meeks, p. 4-5).
This practice can be conducted with routine
traffic stops, or can be completely random based
on the car that is driven, the number of people in
the car and the race of the driver and passengers.
The practice of racial profiling may seem more
prevalent in today's society, but in reality has
been a part of American culture since the days of
slavery. According to Tracey Maclin, a professor
at the Boston University School of Law, racial
profiling is an old concept. The historical roots
"can be traced ...
Related: profiling, racial, racial discrimination, racial profiling, american renaissance

Racial Profiling - 476 words
Racial Profiling The United States is not a
healthy democracy The United States is not a
healthy democracy. A basic requirement for any
healthy democracy is its founding on the basic
principle that all men are created equal. This
means that man is judged on the fact that he is
man, and only that. There are no other means or
factors brought into account. This is not the way
men are judged in the United States. In the United
States, ethnic and racial generalizations often
influence judicial execution. The attorney
general's office of New Jersey itself released a
112 page preliminary report concluding that many
officers may be inadvertently discriminating
against minorities in their fervor to s ...
Related: profiling, racial, racial profiling, attorney general, created equal

Racial Profiling - 1,488 words
Racial Profiling The great era of civil rights
started in the 1960s, with Martin Luther King,
Jr.s stirring "I have a Dream" speech at the
historic march on Washington in August of 1963. At
the same time Birmingham Police Commissioner
"Bull" Connor used powerful fire hoses and vicious
police attack dogs against nonviolent black civil
rights activists. Although these years proved to
be the highlight and downfall of civil rights in
America, even with the 1964 Civil Rights Act and
the 1965 Voting Rights Act being passed, time has
repeated these tumultuous events again in the
present. Racial profiling has been one of many
civil rights issues concerning the unnecessary
stopping and arresting of p ...
Related: profiling, racial, racial bias, racial profiling, police department

Racial Profiling - 1,488 words
Racial Profiling The great era of civil rights
started in the 1960s, with Martin Luther King,
Jr.s stirring "I have a Dream" speech at the
historic march on Washington in August of 1963. At
the same time Birmingham Police Commissioner
"Bull" Connor used powerful fire hoses and vicious
police attack dogs against nonviolent black civil
rights activists. Although these years proved to
be the highlight and downfall of civil rights in
America, even with the 1964 Civil Rights Act and
the 1965 Voting Rights Act being passed, time has
repeated these tumultuous events again in the
present. Racial profiling has been one of many
civil rights issues concerning the unnecessary
stopping and arresting of p ...
Related: profiling, racial, racial bias, racial profiling, attorney general

Racial Profiling - 1,590 words
Racial Profiling Rahsaan DeLain Senior Paper Mrs.
Carlo The issue of racial profiling in America is
one of great importance to the future of American
society. This issue fairly new, in terms of being
recognized is old in its ways. Racism and
stereotyping are issues that date back to many
years ago. Racial profiling in America is on that
needs to be addressed by the government and
society if we ever want America to truly be, The
Land of The Free. One of the main examples of
racial profiling is called DWB (Driving While
Black). This is a term starting to show itself a
lot in cases of racial profiling. This name is
meant to be a shot at he already known DWI
(Driving While Intoxicated). In today ...
Related: profiling, racial, racial profiling, drug trafficking, amadou diallo

Racial Profiling - 978 words
Racial Profiling The topic of racial profiling
amongst minority individuals in the state of New
Jersey has been a heated issue for the past
several years. This department has been charged
with numerous allegations of racism and is the
main focus for racial based events in police
departments nationwide. Although racial profiling
amongst police officers in the state of New Jersey
has been a major issue for many years, it has not
been until recently that action has been taken in
order to investigate the alleged profiling that
has occurred. Hence, until recently, African
American drivers on the New Jersey turnpike stood
a much greater chance than white drivers being
stopped by the state police f ...
Related: profiling, racial, racial profiling, african american, state police

Racial Theories Leading To The Third Reich - 1,208 words
Racial Theories Leading To The Third Reich The
Nazi State of the Third Reich is clearly defined
by racial theory put into practice. One reading
Burleigh and Wipperman's book; The Racial State,
learns of these different racial theories and how
they are implemented under Adolf Hitler in the
Third Reich. As one learns when reading The Racial
State, Adolf Hitler's eugenic and racial-hygienic
theories were not original. Theorists long before
his time wrote of the same racist theories. Hitler
never mentions any of these theorists in his work,
but one can see when reading The Racial State,
that the horrific acts that occurred during the
Third Reich reflected the ideas of these
theorists. Theorist A ...
Related: racial, reich, third reich, adolf hitler, human beings

Racial Unity Through Ceremony - 1,632 words
Racial Unity Through Ceremony Racial Unity Through
Ceremony Over the years, after wars and famine,
peace-time and floods, few things have persisted
to survive. Society, art, and other intangible
objects as these are survivors of two millennia of
human "progress". Intelligent concepts and
premises have also survived, as have emotions and
morals. Even as these outstanding examples of
humanity have survived, so have some less
affirmative ideals lived on through our
fore-bearers. Cultural, ideological, religious,
and political supremacy are still abound today, as
much as they were 50, 100, and even 5,000 years
ago. In a shorter context, racism, the "cockroach"
of human mentality, is still alive. ...
Related: ceremony, racial, unity, spiritual experience, american author

Sexual And Racial Tension In Larsens Passing - 846 words
Sexual and Racial Tension in Larsens Passing Clare
Kendry and Irene Redfield are the two main
characters in Nella Larsens Passing. We do not
learn about the both of them by seeing or hearing
the story from a neutral point of view. Rather, we
are subject to envision the entire novel from
behind the eyes of only one of these characters,
Irene. At first, forcing the reader to suspend
themselves in only one of these two complex minds
may seem like a biased action on the part of the
author. However, as we read further into the book,
we soon discover that the limited third-person
view is necessary to bring both of these figures
to life. This is because Irenes perspective
thrives off of Clare. Desp ...
Related: passing, racial, racial issues, sexual, sexual attraction, tension